Alzheimer Disease: Rimanóczy A

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A digest of articles written 1999 and later, on the topic "Alzheimer Disease," originating from Planet Earth —» Rimanóczy A.  Display:  All Citations ·  All Abstracts
1 Clinical Conference Lack of influence of the apolipoprotein E genotype on the outcome of selegiline treatment in Alzheimer's disease. 2003

Kálmán J, Juhász A, Rimanóczy A, Palotás A, Palotás M, Szabó Z, Boda K, Márki-Zay J, Janka Z. · Department of Psychiatry, Albert Szent-Györgyi Center for Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Szeged, Semmelweis u.6, H-6725 Szeged, Hungary. · Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord. · Pubmed #12714797 No free full text.

Abstract: The objective of our study was to investigate whether an interaction exists between apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype and the response of patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) to selegiline treatment, and whether APOE genotype independently affects the rate of AD progression. A 48-week multicenter double-blind trial was undertaken on 43 patients with mild to moderate AD. Primary efficacy measures were the AD Assessment Scale (ADAS), an 11-item cognitive subscale of ADAS (ADAS-Cog/11) and the Mini Mental State Examination. Secondary outcome measures were Clinical Global Impression of severity and CGI of change scales. The therapeutic response to selegiline was not affected by APOE genotype. Our results revealed that the APOE4 allele carrier AD probands did not respond better to selegiline treatment than the APOE2-3 patients, i.e. APOE status did not influence the therapeutic outcome of selegiline treatment.

2 Article Decreased serum and red blood cell kynurenic acid levels in Alzheimer's disease. 2007

Hartai Z, Juhász A, Rimanóczy A, Janáky T, Donkó T, Dux L, Penke B, Tóth GK, Janka Z, Kálmán J. · Department of Psychiatry, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary. · Neurochem Int. · Pubmed #17023091 No free full text.

Abstract: Kynurenine aminotransferases (KAT I and KAT II) are responsible for the transamination of kynurenine (KYN) to form kynurenic acid (KYNA), an excitatory amino acid receptor antagonist. Since these members of the kynurenine pathway (KP) are proposed to be involved in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's dementia (AD), the activities of these enzymes and the levels of these metabolites were measured in the plasma and red blood cells (RBCs) of AD and control subjects together with the inheritance of the apolipoprotein (APOE) epsilon4 allele. KYNA levels were significantly decreased both in the plasma and in the RBCs in AD, but the levels of KYN and the activities of KAT I and KAT II remained unchanged. No association has been found with the possession of the epsilon4 allele. These findings indicate an altered peripheral KP in AD regardless of the APOE status of the probands.

3 Article APP mRNA splicing is upregulated in the brain of biglycan transgenic mice. 2007

Bjelik A, Pákáski M, Bereczki E, Gonda S, Juhász A, Rimanóczy A, Zana M, Janka Z, Sántha M, Kálmán J. · Alzheimer's Disease Research Centre, Department of Psychiatry, Albert Szent-Györgyi Center for Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Szeged, 6 Semmelweis u., Szeged H-6725, Hungary. · Neurochem Int. · Pubmed #16962684 No free full text.

Abstract: Many of the risk factors for cerebrovascular disease and atherosclerosis also increase the risk of Alzheimer's disease, characterized by the cerebral deposition of beta-amyloid plaques resulting from the abnormal processing of the transmembrane amyloid precursor protein (APP). The initiating event of cholesterol-induced atherosclerosis is the retention and accumulation of atherogenic apolipoprotein B (apoB) together with low-density lipoproteins in the vascular intima. Biglycan, a member of the small leucine-rich protein family, was suspected of contributing to this process. The individual and combined overexpressions of biglycan and apoB-100 were therefore examined on the cortical APP mRNA levels of transgenic mice by means of semiquantitative PCR. As compared with the control littermates, transgenic biglycan mice had significantly increased cortical APP695 (122%) and APP770 (157%) mRNA levels, while the double transgenic (apoB(+/-)xbiglycan(+/-)) mice did not exhibit any changes. These results provide the first experimental evidence that the atherogenic risk factor biglycan alters APP splicing and may participate in the pathogenesis of both Alzheimer and vascular dementias.

4 Article Age-dependent oxidative stress-induced DNA damage in Down's lymphocytes. 2006

Zana M, Szécsényi A, Czibula A, Bjelik A, Juhász A, Rimanóczy A, Szabó K, Vetró A, Szucs P, Várkonyi A, Pákáski M, Boda K, Raskó I, Janka Z, Kálmán J. · Department of Psychiatry, Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, Faculty of Medicine, Albert Szent-Györgyi Center for Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Szeged, 6 Semmelweis St., Szeged, H-6725, Hungary. · Biochem Biophys Res Commun. · Pubmed #16696946 No free full text.

Abstract: The aim of the present study was to investigate the oxidative status of lymphocytes from children (n=7) and adults (n=18) with Down's syndrome (DS). The basal oxidative condition, the vulnerability to in vitro hydrogen peroxide exposure, and the repair capacity were measured by means of the damage-specific alkaline comet assay. Significantly and age-independently elevated numbers of single strand breaks and oxidized bases (pyrimidines and purines) were found in the nuclear DNA of the lymphocytes in the DS group in the basal condition. These results may support the role of an increased level of endogenous oxidative stress in DS and are similar to those previously demonstrated in Alzheimer's disease. In the in vitro oxidative stress-induced state, a markedly higher extent of DNA damage was observed in DS children as compared with age- and gender-matched healthy controls, suggesting that young trisomic lymphocytes are more sensitive to oxidative stress than normal ones. However, the repair ability itself was not found to be deteriorated in either DS children or DS adults.

5 Article CYP46 T/C polymorphism is not associated with Alzheimer's dementia in a population from Hungary. 2005

Juhász A, Rimanóczy A, Boda K, Vincze G, Szlávik G, Zana M, Bjelik A, Pákáski M, Bódi N, Palotás A, Janka Z, Kálmán J. · Department of Psychiatry, Albert Szent-Györgyi Medical and Pharmaceutical Center, Faculty of Medicine, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary. · Neurochem Res. · Pubmed #16258842 No free full text.

Abstract: Multiple genetic and environmental factors regulate the susceptibility to Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recently, several independent studies have reported that a locus on chromosome 14q32.1, where a gene encoding a cholesterol degrading enzyme of the brain, called 24-hydroxylase (CYP46A1) is located, has been linked with AD. The single nucleotide polymorphism (T/C) in intron 2 of CYP46 gene has been found to confer the risk for AD. The water soluble 24(S)-hydroxysterol is the product of the CYP46A1, and elevated plasma and cerebrospinal fluid hydroxysterol concentrations have been found in AD, reflecting increased brain cholesterol turnover or cellular degradation, due to the neurodegenerative process. A case-control study was performed on 125 AD and 102 age- and gender-matched control subjects (CNT) from Hungary, to test the association of CYP46 T/C and apolipoprotein E (ApoE) gene polymorphisms in AD. The frequency of the CYP46 C allele was similar (chi2=0.647, df=1, P=0.421, exact P=0.466, OR=0.845; 95% CI: 0.561-1.274) in both groups (CNT: 27%; 95% CI: 21.3-33.4; AD 30%; 95% CI: 25.0-36.3). The ApoE varepsilon4 allele was significantly over-represented (chi2=11.029, df=2, P=0.004) in the AD population (23.2%; 95% CI: 18.2-29.0) when compared with the CNT (11.3%; 95% CI: 7.4-16.6). The presence or absence of one or two CYP46C alleles together with the ApoE varepsilon4 allele did not increase the risk of AD (OR=3.492; 95% CI: 1.401-8.707; P<0.007 and OR=3.714; 95% CI: 1.549-8.908; P<0.003, respectively). Our results indicate that the intron 2 T/C polymorphism of CYP46 gene (neither alone, nor together with the varepsilon4 allele) does not increase the susceptibility to late-onset sporadic AD in the Hungarian population.

6 Article ApoE -491A/T promoter polymorphism is not an independent risk factor, but associated with the epsilon4 allele in Hungarian Alzheimer's dementia population. 2005

Juhász A, Palotás A, Janka Z, Rimanóczy A, Palotás M, Bódi N, Boda K, Zana M, Vincze G, Kálmán J. · Department of Psychiatry, Albert Szent-Györgyi Medical and Pharmaceutical Center, Faculty of Medicine, University of Szeged, Semmelweis u 6, H-6721, Szeged, Hungary. · Neurochem Res. · Pubmed #16176061 No free full text.

Abstract: Apolipoprotein E gene (Apo(epsilon)) has three common alleles (epsilon2, epsilon3, and epsilon4), of which epsilon4 has been shown to be associated with an increased risk for Alzheimer's disease (AD). Possible additional genetic factors, like the -491A variant of ApoE promoter may modify the development of AD, independently of the ApoE allele status. The objective of this study was to investigate whether A/T allelic polymorphism at site-491 of the ApoE promoter is associated with AD in a Hungarian population. The genomic DNA isolated from peripheral blood lymphocytes of 52 late-onset AD and 53 control individuals was used as a template for the two examined polymorphisms and PCR assay was applied. The epsilon4 allele was significantly over-represented in the AD group (28%) as compared with the control population (7%). No significant differences have been found between the control and the AD populations regarding the occurrence of the promoter A allele frequencies (control: 77%, AD: 70%). However, the AA genotype was more frequent in the AD group (48%) than in the control (10%) when the presence of epsilon4 allele was also considered. It is unlikely therefore that the -491A variant of the ApoE promoter gene is an independent risk factor in the Hungarian AD population, but a linkage disequilibrium exists between the two examined mutations.

7 Article Alzheimer's lymphocytes are resistant to ultraviolet B-induced apoptosis. 2006

Zana M, Juhász A, Rimanóczy A, Bjelik A, Baltás E, Ocsovszki I, Boda K, Penke B, Dobozy A, Kemény L, Janka Z, Kálmán J. · Department of Psychiatry, Albert Szent-Györgyi Center for Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Szeged, 6 Semmelweis Street, Szeged H-6725, Hungary. · Neurobiol Aging. · Pubmed #15961188 No free full text.

Abstract: In the present pilot investigation, the susceptibility of T-lymphocytes from Alzheimer's disease (AD) subjects (n=22) and aged-matched, non-demented controls (CNT) (n=12) was examined with ultraviolet (UV) B light-induced apoptosis in vitro. The basal apoptotic ratios were similar in both groups. However, the AD lymphocytes displayed significantly (p<0.0001) lower apoptotic levels than those of the CNT lymphocytes at all of the applied UVB exposure doses (100, 200 and 300 mJ/cm(2)). These observations indicate that AD lymphocytes are more resistant than CNT lymphocytes to UVB irradiation.

8 Article The nitric oxide synthase-3 codon 298 polymorphism is not associated with late-onset sporadic Alzheimer's dementia and Lewy body disease in a sample from Hungary. 2003

Kálmán J, Juhász A, Rimanóczy A, Palotás A, Palotás M, Boda K, Márki-Zay J, Csibri E, Janka Z. · Department of Psychiatry, Albert Szent-Györgyi Center for Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Szeged, Hungary. · Psychiatr Genet. · Pubmed #14639046 No free full text.

Abstract: An association study was performed between apolipoprotein E (apoE) polymorphism and the common structural polymorphism Glu/Asp at codon 298 of the nitric oxide synthase (NOS3) gene in late-onset sporadic Alzheimer's dementia probands (LOAD), diffuse Lewy body dementia cases (DLBD) and controls in a Hungarian sample. The frequency of individuals who carried the apoE epsilon4 allele was significantly more common in both dementia groups (LOAD, 20%; DLBD, 27%; control, 8%; control versus DLBD, chi2=13.264, degrees of freedom=2, P<0.001; control versus LOAD, chi2=6.628, degrees of freedom=2, P<0.036). However, there were no significant differences in the NOS3 genotype and allele distributions between the LOAD, DLBD and control groups. The apoE status has been found to be independent from the NOS3 codon 298 polymorphism in the examined cohort. Despite the facts that NOS3 is associated with neuritic sprouting, and aberrant neuronal and glial expression of the same molecule has been found in neurodegenerative diseases, it is unlikely that the polymorphism Glu/Asp of the NOS3 gene is involved in the development of LOAD and DLBD.

9 Article Alpha2-macroglobulin exon 24 (Val-1000-Ile) polymorphism is not associated with late-onset sporadic Alzheimer's dementia in the Hungarian population. 2002

Janka Z, Juhász A, Rimanóczy A, Boda K, Márki-Zay J, Palotás M, Kuk I, Zöllei M, Jakab K, Kálmán J. · Department of Psychiatry, Albert Szent-Györgyi Center for Medical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Szeged, Szeged, Hungary. · Psychiatr Genet. · Pubmed #11901360 No free full text.

Abstract: Several lines of biochemical evidence support a role of alpha2-macroglobulin (A2M) in the pathogenesis of Alzheimer's dementia (AD). A2M participates in the general defence mechanism against proteinases and it is supposed to be involved in the degradation of beta-amyloid peptide (betaAP). Furthermore, A2M has been shown to reduce betaAP fibril formation, and it is upregulated in the acute-phase inflammatory response like the process occurring in the AD brain. The exon 18 splice acceptor deletion polymorphism and the exon 24 (Val-1000-Ile) GG genotype were reported to be associated with AD, but the results are contradictory. Since the Hungarian population is genetically distinct from the other European ethnic groups, we examined whether the risk for developing AD is increased in the A2M GG carriers. The interaction of apolipoprotein E (apoE) and A2M polymorphisms was also examined. The distribution of A2M genotypes and alleles in the entire data set was consistent with the previous negative observations in which A and G allelic frequencies were comparable in both groups (72% and 28% in the AD population, and 72% and 28% in the control population, respectively). The GG genotype was over-represented (14%) only in the apoE epsilon4 non-carrier subgroup of AD probands (7% in the control group), but the difference was not significant. Our data suggest that, although A2M has an important role in the AD-specific neurodegenerative process, its exon 24 Val-1000-Ile polymorphism is not likely to be associated with late-onset sporadic AD in the Hungarian population.